Archives for 2008

Blogging Hazards & Freedom of Speech

I am passionate about what I do and people have always either loved or hated my work. I eventually figured out that it is a career hazard.

The general rule of thumb is that if you have an opinion, voice it, and back it up–it is bound to rock the very foundation upon which some people cling. It also brings to light that which some people want to keep hidden.

Bear with me as I warm up to my point…

When I first began using head halter devices on dogs in the early 1990s people yelled and screamed at me.

When I advocated the use of training to ease stress and to use as mental enrichment in zoos in the early to mid-1980s people yelled and screamed at me–and told me I was out of my mind.

As one of the clinic associates in a center focused on enhancing the well-being of animals in the mid-1990s (providing holistic veterinary care, natural nutrition (raw food diets), animal communicators, innovative behavior modification, taking cells for cloning, and providing a cryobank for pets) I found we encountered the same resistance.

Today such activities, tools, and techniques that I took heat over for in the past are now considered necessities and industry standards.

Sometimes it sucks to be innovative, progressive…or outspoken.

Another incident that came up early in my Internet days was when I was accused of being an animal rights activist.

Now you probably don’t think that would be a bad thing–but it was. For those of you not in the wild animal training or zoo realm–this is akin to being called a militant guerrilla or a foaming-at-the-mouth religious fanatic.

Anyway, imagine my horror when a falconer group bashed and thrashed my good name around in their list-serve (of which I was a member). When I wrote in–seems the guy made a mistake–whoops.

How about checking your facts before bashing someone? After clearing up the issue I left the group in disgust. Nobody checked the guy’s statements nor did they ask me about them–they just jumped on the bandwagon.

When I did disaster rescue for a national group my zoo colleagues confronted me–was I an animal rights activist? They were afraid that since I was brought into help a zoo with major elephant problems that I might be a plant…it had happened prior to my arrival.

No, I wasn’t a plant but I was the Western Regional Coordinator for Animal Disaster Rescue for a group labeled as an “animal rights group” so they didn’t know if I could be trusted.

For the record I am an animal welfare advocate–if you don’t know the difference–you should learn. Because you might just be supporting a group that takes a lot of money without actually putting YOUR funds into really helping animals. Check their financial statements to see just how much of the funds actually reach the animals. It will surprise you.

Animal welfare, as I define it, are those actions that make sure animals get fair, humane treatment, mental stimulation, enrichment, and the best care possible.

I wonder why people send money to groups who were known to throw paint or blood onto others in protest over what they were wearing. Their financial supporters seem to fail to recognize that “liberation” techniques used destroyed property, hurt or kill animals, and set back medical research are bad things to funnel money into.

Now, don’t take my statements the wrong way because I am not saying that much of our animal treatment in the United States is the best BUT I don’t condone bad behavior.

Also, I have met and talked with leaders and participants of some of those “animal rights” groups–but I don’t support them or their work.

You might think that animal rights means fighting for “fair and humane treatment” (which is one definition) but the militant reality out in the world tends to mean that the agenda motivating the group(s) are that animals should not be kept as pets, nor should they be kept in captivity, nor should they (or their products) be used by humans in any capacity.

Since I’ve been writing on the Internet I’ve been flamed more than once. At another one of my blogs I’ve even been threatened with legal action for airing dirt or the truth about things people didn’t want revealed–just got through another cycle–at least it was a year since the previous threats and legal letters.

I live in the United States where there is the First Amendment and Freedom of Speech–and attorneys who specialize in those areas. Thank goodness they do–because more and more people try to shut bloggers up.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

And never mind that more and more people are turning to “citizen journalists” and bloggers for information that they are not getting from the major media–but that is another topic for another blog.

So my point to this ramble is that Gina over at the Pet Connection is a savvy columnist, pet enthusiast, and another outspoken blogger. The Pet Connection blog team is a good one–I read the Pet Connection blog daily and so do many, many others.

Anyway, she hit a nerve and has enough readers to get one of those nasty legal letters from PeTA telling her to retract previous statements from her blog post here.

Should I say welcome to the blogger legal letter recipient club? 😉

Now I have to say that I hate getting those letters–they disturb your peace but that is when your voice is more important. Sometimes you might acquiesce but sometimes you need to take a stand.

My vote is with Gina. I don’t believe she was wrong and I believe she is fair…

You go girl.

Now for you readers–go visit these links and you decide–just let me know what you think below in the comments:

Pet Connection March 28, 2008

PeTA Numbers as Reported 

PeTA Letter to Gina

Consumer Freedom Post

PeTA Letter to Nathan Winograd (PDF)

Activist Cash Website PeTA Page

No Kill Now Website PeTA Page

PeTA Kills Animals Website

Wild Animals Bugging You? Kill Them!

I hope the headline here got you hot under the collar. It certainly irks me to find out that the National Marine Fisheries has granted permission to kill sea lions that are preying on salmon. The article talks about salmon gobbling sea lions but doesn’t seem to look at how humans have over fished, over polluted, and generally behaved badly when it comes to human encroachment upon the wilderness.

Since I live in a town adjacent to the wilderness, this is a hot issue as the local powers and contractors continue to build in an area that is supposed to be a wilderness resort area. At one time the Bald Eagle winter population numbered about two dozen–funny enough, when the forestry traded a parcel in eagle habitat and allowed it to be developed–the eagle population fell.

Recently a local group, Friends of Fawnskin, won a lawsuit against a development–seems they were not adhering to the law–and most everyone was looking the other way. Our town is one of the only locations where you can still access the lake..and I’ll save those additional comments for the local rags.

Just two weekends ago neighbor reported people illegally fishing–the tributaries leading down to the lake are off limits during spawning season –but people ignored the sign posted prominently in front of where they fished!

This sea lion problem first popped up in the news last year. Recently one of the blogs I read asked if anyone wanted a sea lion as a pet and linked to this piece…a joke but it caught my attention.

And don’t think that it is just a regional problem–it is one of global proportions which can also be seen in how “animal reserves” have shrunk–and animal populations with them.

Okay, so I am going to rant and ramble…

The ocean populations of fish, tide pool animals, whales, sharks, and other critters are in trouble. When I lived on the coast, sea animal suffered from fishing hooks, filament entanglement, ingestion of plastic, and pollution. Today this has escalated. Take a look at some of these pictures of shark victims or this informative section on the ocean problems by the World Wildlife Fund.

Here are some of their facts on the fishing depletion issue but you can read more here:

The global fishing fleet is currently 2.5x larger than what the oceans can sustainably support – meaning that humans are taking far more fish out of the ocean than can be replaced by those remaining. As a result:

  • 52% of the world’s fisheries are fully exploited, and 24% are overexploited, depleted, or recovering from depletion
  • Seven of the top ten marine fisheries, accounting for about 30% of all capture fisheries production, are fully exploited or overexploited
  • As many as 90% of all the ocean’s large fish have been fished out
  • Several important commercial fish populations have declined to the point where their survival is threatened
  • Unless the current situation improves, stocks of all species currently fished for food are predicted to collapse by 2048

What can you do? The WWF give this action list

However, other actions are to sign a petition, write your local representative, or contact other government leaders now.

Do you have any other tips or links? Leave a comment!